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what hi-def vid camera has the best stability and focus?
Oh, and 1k or less.....
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For under $1K you're best to put it on sticks as many sub $1K consumer cams OIS suck ass. Canon just announced a few new consumer cams (their tape lines are dead) that hit the streets in April and offer some upgraded features over their HF20/200 lines. Their new lines actually include a focus dial which was sorely missed on the HF20 which was focused by using a stupid ass joystick.
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I would throw another grand on your budget and pick up the Panasonic HMC40. Not exactly the HMC150 but still not a bad cam that kicks most consumer cams right in their dicks.
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Thanks
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Stability has nothing to do with the camera and everything to do with the photographer. Focus???? how fast do you want it?
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Here is a rule of thumb about cameras. You will get what you pay for. No company is going to put out a cheap two grand camera that will compete with its six grand camera. It makes no sense. Personally, I would never buy a thousand dollar camera for business. It will always look cheap. So on the day of the shoot, you get your talent....you get them in make up...you buy the costumes...you pay for the location...and then you shoot it with a crappy camera and from then on, all your work will look crappy. Why bother. If you can't afford a real camera, go out and rent a good one for your shoot. Do that a few times, get good product that will have legs and make you enough money to get a decent camera.
Failing that if you must use a crappy camera...get good lighting and that will probably see you through it. One or the other will sort of kind of work if you know what you are doing. If you don't have a handle on any of the above, go out an hire someone who does and you will be much happier than tossing it all down the toilet on a cheap camera with sound like a tin can. |
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Personally I couldn't be happier with my $450 Canon HV20. :) Sample: http://thestrippedsuperstars.com/Home-Page.html |
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ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
Rent cameras before you buy them and argue that price makes no dif to the camera store and you'll walk out with the camera they use as a door stopper. Seriously though, take a photography class or a filmaking class. Learn what you are doing before you "just wing it" with production. The wide angle lens on my HD Sony was $1100. What about lights? Still cameras? Locations? Talent? Flash cards? Editing software? HD tapes @ $15 a pop. Come on people. I can take a great picture with a Box Camera because I know what the fuck I'm doing with it. It's not the camera, it's the operator, but let's not be dillusional about cheap ass handicams VS a pro set-up. Who are you trying to fool? Yourselves? |
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There are a ton of online photography courses out there that will improve a novice's skill a thousand percent quite quickly. But I agree with you that a little education goes a long way. BTW, if you can get your hands on it anymore, Kodak used to put out a book for guys with 8mm film cameras and it was pretty decent. All the same rules of film making apply to day as they did way back then and it was really easy to understand. An axis is still an axis...a simple sequence is still a simple sequence....horizons and looking room are still the same. Learn the rules then figure out how to break them. |
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OK, in a nutshell....for all you guys who think a cheap camera will do the job....here is what will change it all. This little device that allows you to easily watch your fav porn site videos on tv was the hit of ces. Just for fun, run up that video on a 1920 X 1080 television set and have a look at it. Then think about looking at it 2 years from now....
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/01/09/boxee.brown/ Quote:
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go with anything from panasonic - but hardly with something below 1K - maybe you can shoot your wife walking the beach at your holiday but hardly some pro stuff with cheap stuff :2 cents:
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I love my Canon HV40 it runs around $750 plus another $100 for a wide angel lens.
http://www.usa.canon.com/app/images/...40_586x225.jpg |
I think the hv40 is a good, wise choice.
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http://img125.imagevenue.com/loc547/..._122_547lo.jpghttp://img17.imagevenue.com/loc153/t..._122_153lo.jpghttp://img225.imagevenue.com/loc669/..._122_669lo.jpghttp://img187.imagevenue.com/loc667/..._122_667lo.jpg |
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http://vimeo.com/6447257
We filmed this with an EX1. There's no way in hell a sub $1K cam could ever accomplish this. |
http://vimeo.com/6555478
Again another one that cannot be replicated with the same quality on sub $1k cams. Quality is normally determined by the glass you have. |
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That IS raw footage, hasnt been rendered at all. Oh and I can achieve a MUCH better rack focus and better DOF than the HMC150 or pretty much any semi-pro cam when I have my Letus ultimate and Canon 85 f/1.8 attached :thumbsup |
bump to read later.
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Ah ok. Well still. My argument was you can do ALOT with the HF S100, not just point and shoot home movies. Thanks to its larger sensor and better video resolution than most semi-pro cams, it will perform just as well as your HMC150 or the XH A1s in most any situation despite its price and size. Thats all :) |
That is nice work fml. It has a huge 5d footprint, I think. I love that look. I have a 5d, but it is pretty useless for rack it and whack it porn which is all I shoot anymore.
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But I will tell you that the number one most profitable camera I ever owned was an Olympus 3030 that cost 1600 bucks and I probably made over half a million bucks over the years out of that camera. It was slow. It was a pain in the ass. But the quality when lit was pretty good for a 99 vintage digital. Olympus could have had the whole market, but they never seriously moved into slr and Canon and Nikon dived in. |
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The 5d is the coolest camera I have ever owned for the fun factor. Best bargain in photography today.
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